- Trenchant
- Today's Word
Trenchant
Trenchant
TREN-chuntDefinition
(adjective) Vigorous and effective; expressed with a sharpness and directness that cuts to the heart of the matter.Example
The reviewer’s trenchant analysis dismantled the argument so efficiently that by the end there was nothing left to disagree with — only the wreckage to survey.Word Origin

Trenchant derives from the Old French trenchant, meaning “cutting” — the present participle of trenchier, “to cut,” from the Vulgar Latin trincare. The same root gives us trench — a long cut in the earth — and retrench, meaning to cut back. It entered English in the 14th century, initially describing the literal sharpness of a blade before acquiring its figurative sense of thought or expression so precise and direct it cuts through complexity without effort, leaving clarity where confusion previously stood.
Fun FactH.L. Mencken — the American journalist and critic — was perhaps the 20th century’s most celebrated practitioner of trenchant prose. His sentences were so sharp they drew blood, and his targets so precisely identified that his criticism became difficult to dismiss even when it was wildly unfair. He famously described a certain kind of politician as someone who, “having reached the limit of his intelligence, then abandons intelligence entirely.” Mencken understood something that writers still study: that trenchant criticism lands hardest not when it attacks but when it simply describes with such precision that the subject has nowhere to hide. The cut isn’t visible until everything around it falls apart.
Today's Popular Words
Trenchant
- Today's Word
Trenchant
TREN-chunt
Definition
(adjective) Vigorous and effective; expressed with a sharpness and directness that cuts to the heart of the matter.
Example
The reviewer’s trenchant analysis dismantled the argument so efficiently that by the end there was nothing left to disagree with — only the wreckage to survey.
Word Origin
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Trenchant derives from the Old French trenchant, meaning “cutting” — the present participle of trenchier, “to cut,” from the Vulgar Latin trincare. The same root gives us trench — a long cut in the earth — and retrench, meaning to cut back. It entered English in the 14th century, initially describing the literal sharpness of a blade before acquiring its figurative sense of thought or expression so precise and direct it cuts through complexity without effort, leaving clarity where confusion previously stood.
Fun Fact
H.L. Mencken — the American journalist and critic — was perhaps the 20th century’s most celebrated practitioner of trenchant prose. His sentences were so sharp they drew blood, and his targets so precisely identified that his criticism became difficult to dismiss even when it was wildly unfair. He famously described a certain kind of politician as someone who, “having reached the limit of his intelligence, then abandons intelligence entirely.” Mencken understood something that writers still study: that trenchant criticism lands hardest not when it attacks but when it simply describes with such precision that the subject has nowhere to hide. The cut isn’t visible until everything around it falls apart.
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